Korean actors dating in real life

This article possibly contains original research. In the past, terms such as actorfic were used to distinguish such stories from those based on fictional characters from movies or television series. In general, korean actors dating in real life authors seem to adopt the public personas of the celebrities in question as their own characters, building a fictional universe based on the supposed real-life histories of their idols.

Information from interviews, documentaries, music videos, and other publicity sources are assimilated into the stories. It is also very popular to write fiction about celebrity couples. Communities of writers build collective archetypes based on the celebrities’ public personas. Depictions of actors in RPF stories are often heavily influenced by characters the actors portray. A significant minority of such stories take the form of “Mary Sue fanfiction”, which feature a “Mary Sue” character, usually but not always female, who is described in extremely idealistic terms and is described as a wish-fulfillment image of the author. Politician fic is sometimes used as a form of satire, or to highlight the underlying biases or attitudes of the politician being portrayed, although more recently there has been an increase in more ‘ordinary’ fanfiction about British politicians in particular, with a notable emphasis on slash. The earliest known RPF was written by Shakespeare as Shakespearean history, published in his First folio in 1623.

Following that, the Brontë children wrote RPF from 1826 to approximately 1844. During the 1940s, the Whitman Publishing Company released authorized editions of real-person fiction, possibly as a boost to the careers of the Hollywood stars of that era. The original edition of the “Three Investigators” children’s crime series was billed as “Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators”, with Hitchcock as mentor to the eponymous heroes. Star Trek characters to be swapped with the 20th-century actors who played them. 1980s, when MTV brought musicians into close focus for millions of adolescents. Some of these stories may have circulated in fanzine form, but there was little community and many authors remained unaware of others doing similar work.

When the RPF section was removed from Fanfiction. RPF is generally totally absent from Usenet, especially in older and more established newsgroups. The website The Nifty Archive, which launched in 2003, was a notable repository of boy band and celebrity erotica. Other music-related RPF websites include rockfic. Another popular website for RPF chosen by youth fanfic writers is Winglin. In 2009, the Organization for Transformative Works launched the website Archive of Our Own, which included categories for RPF.

The morality of real person fiction is debated. Most RPF authors state that they have no intent to claim these fictional portrayals reflect the real activities of the “source figure” in any way. Some authors of traditional fan fiction view real person fiction with suspicion, disdain, or outright disgust. Some feel that fanfic based on fictional characters is on shaky enough legal ground, barely tolerated by the authors, producers, copyright owners of the original works and that RPF, especially real person slash, may turn corporate and public opinion against fan fiction as a whole. The often included disclaimer in story headers, stating that the work is pure fiction, has so far protected Real Person Fiction from slander and libel.